Atlantis: How Plato’s Allegory Became a Dangerous Myth

For centuries we have searched the ocean floor for a lost utopian civilization, but we misunderstood the assignment. The creator of the Atlantis story never meant it as a map. He meant it as a mirror.

This episode traces how a minor philosophical allegory about greed and hubris escaped its author and morphed into the ultimate geographical wild goose chase, fueling utopian literature, racist pseudo-history, occultism, and even Nazi ideology. It is less a story about a sunken city and more about how the human brain craves a mother culture even when science says otherwise.

  • How Plato’s Timaeus and Critias are the sole source, using a frame narrative to give fiction the appearance of truth
  • The original meaning: Atlantis as the hubristic naval empire defeated by a virtuous, idealized Athens
  • How the discovery of the Americas, then 19th-century Mayanism, weaponized the myth to deny indigenous achievements
  • Ignatius Donnelly’s 1882 bestseller and Blavatsky’s psychic root races, leading into Ariosophy and the Thule Society
  • How 1960s plate tectonics made a sunken Atlantic continent impossible, and the real inspirations like the Thera eruption and the sunken city of Helike

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